Posts Tagged ‘Tender Greens’

Food Glorious Food

Tuesday, June 8th, 2010

By Eric Rosen
LA Confidential

la confidential summer 2010 Food Glorious FoodWE HESITATE TO GENERALIZE, but when it comes to dining around town, everyone has his or her favorite hangouts, and there are a few spots you can be sure to find certain LA “types.” Here’s our guide as to who eats what where

WeHo Party Boy
Power Lunch: Tender Greens

Eat My Blog Redux on June 19 at Tender Greens

Sunday, May 30th, 2010

by Esther
e*star LA

eat my blog info postcard Eat My Blog Redux on June 19 at Tender Greens

The bloggers of the now-semi-annual Eat My Blog bake sale are coming together for the second time on Saturday, June 19, 2010. In one of the most impressive baking efforts in the city, 100% of the proceeds from the sale will be donated to the Los Angeles Regional Food Bank. This time, Eat My Blog will be held at Tender Greens West Hollywood where over 2,000 goods from over 70 bakers will be on display – all items costing a simple $1 – $4 each. Bring cash!

You can look forward to delicious eats from local baking star power like KCRW Good Food host Evan Kleiman, Chicks with Knives, Debbie Lee, Drago Centro, Starry Kitchen, Bakelab, Cube, Fraiche, Choppe Choppe, Hollywood Corner, Valerie Confections, Plaisir, Scoops Ice Cream, and Tender Greens themselves. The Coffee Bean & Tea Leaf will be featuring a selection of hot beverages to help wash down all your sweets!

Not enticed, yet? Get there early before everything is gone – including bacon brownies, chocolate whoopie pies and ”intriguing debuts [like] Momofuku’s Crack Pie from the Los Angeles Times’ Daily Dish and Chocolate Guinness Cupcakes with Bacon Cream Cheese Frosting from Pat Saperstein of Eating LA,” says Diana Takes a Bite, one of the members on the Eat My Blog committee. What’s more, benefiting the LA Food Bank and fighting hunger should be reason enough to satisfy your sweet tooth; at the last Eat My Blog, over $3,000 was raised! “We are excited to partner with the Foodbank again, especially after visiting the facility this winter to see how the money we raised would be used,” said Cathy Danh, author of Gastronomy and founder of Eat My Blog.

I’ll see you bright and early that Saturday in June. After all - if you wait, all the good things will be gone!

Combo Plate: Do-gooder baking

Sunday, May 30th, 2010

By Rene Lynch
Los Angeles Times

eat my blog info postcard Combo Plate: Do gooder baking

–Save the date: The second annual Eat My Blog bake sale is being held on June 19, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., at Tender Greens in West Hollywood (8759 Santa Monica Boulevard). You can thank bloggers Cathy Danh of Gastronomy Blog and Laurie Moore of G-Ma’s Bakery for this opportunity to eat carbs and do good at the same time. Expect over 2,000 baked goods from 70-plus bakers. (I am making Crack Pies.) All items are priced between $1 to $4, and proceeds go to the Los Angeles Regional Foodbank.

Eaterwire

Saturday, May 29th, 2010

By Lesley Balla
Eater LA

After the success of the last Eat My Blog bake sale, it’s back again June 19 from 10AM-4PM at Tender Greens in WeHo. Get your sweet tooth on with over 2,000 baked goods from over 70 bakers, including carrot cake cookie sandwiches, bacon chocolate chip cookies, homemade salted caramels, and strawberry balsamic cake priced between $1 to $4. Proceeds benefit the Los Angeles Regional Foodbank.

Eat My Blog!

Saturday, May 29th, 2010

by Catty Critic
Dining with the Catty Critic

I’m excited to participate in the 2nd annual Eat My Blog charity bake sale on Saturday, June 19th from 10am to 4pm at Tender Greens in West Hollywood.

Over 70 bakers will be donating scrumptious treats such as carrot cake cookie sandwiches, bacon chocolate chip cookies, homemade salted caramels and strawberry balsamic cake. I’ll be making mini versions of this delicious almond tea cake sans strawberries. All items will be priced between $1-4.

100% of proceeds will be donated to the Los Angeles Regional Foodbank.

Besides bloggers’ baked goods, local chefs and restaurants such as Chicks with Knives, Starry Kitchen, Bakelab, Fraiche, Tender Greens and Drago Centro will be donating special treats. The Coffee Bean and Tea Leaf will also be on hand serving up hot drinks to help wash down all the yummy eats.

Come out and support a great cause!

 Eat My Blog!

A Little Farm in Pt. Loma Feeding Tender Greens Diners

Friday, May 28th, 2010

sdfoodstuff1 A Little Farm in Pt. Loma Feeding Tender Greens DinersFrom the street, the hilltop Pt. Loma property of the Reeb family looks like just another suburban home. Sitting on a cul-de-sac over a canyon, the house was built in 1937 and has the old-fashioned charm of a place that was built for family living. Even stepping into the back yard — with its pool and grass — doesn’t reveal the scope of what Paul Reeb and his son Steve are up to: gardening for the masses. Or at least for the masses who eat at local restaurant Tender Greens literally across the street in Liberty Station.

Reeb has taken land, now owned by his mother, that’s just under an acre and turned it into a produce oasis with a little greenhouse and even a little vineyard that produces grapes that he, in turn, crushes to make wine. And that wasn’t easy since much of the property slopes steeply down into a canyon.

I first met Reeb late last summer at a dinner hosted by Tender Greens to show off Reeb’s bounty. A graphic designer by trade, he’s long had a yearning to be a farmer. Living just a few blocks from his mother’s house means he can spend a lot of time working this land when he’s not doing his “day” job. Having  23-year-old Steve help out when he’s not working at Tender Greens himself is a huge help, Reeb says. And chef/owner Pete Balistreri buys everything Reeb grows, including tomatoes, greens, zucchini, radishes, and artichokes.

tomato plants A Little Farm in Pt. Loma Feeding Tender Greens DinersReeb has recently finished his winter crops so most of what’s in the ground currently are young plants just getting started for a summer harvest. Zucchini is in the ground around the pool, tomato plants are almost everywhere you turn and there are about 25 heirloom varieties, plus 10 Reeb is experimenting with — about 200 in all, including Abe Lincoln, Dr. Whyche, Risentraube, German Pink, Hillbilly, Black Krim (which Reeb says is the best tasting), Omars Lebanese (which get huge), Bonnie’s Best, and Blonde Kopftashen.

“I grow these for taste not looks,” Reeb says. “Taste is number one.”

Reeb gets his seeds from Seed Savers Exchange, plus he harvests his own. With all those tomatoes, his wife often freezes the tomatoes whole to use in the winter for soup or sauce. Or she dries them.

micro daikon greens A Little Farm in Pt. Loma Feeding Tender Greens DinersUp near the house is a little greenhouse where a sea of micro greens, mostly daikon, is growing. Behind the greenhouse is a tiny man-made pond filled with bluegills and crawdads. The nitrogen they produce in the water fills a gerry-rigged irrigation system constructed by the Reebs.

Surrounding all this are beds brimming with tall, swaying anise, fragrant lavender, and mounds of Easter Egg radishes. Anaheim and poblano chili plants are just getting a start, along with onions and green beans. There are some citrus trees, an ancient, still prolific, avocado tree, and, well, a lot of weeds.

The canyon garden is what’s most impressive. Seven years ago the men started clearing out what was long a fire hazard, cut down some diseased Torrey Pines, and began the job of terracing and planting grapevines down the steep slope.

artichokes A Little Farm in Pt. Loma Feeding Tender Greens DinersRight now the chardonnay, zinfandel, and pinot noir grapes are just popping out. Around them are colorful nasturtiums, bushy sage plants, fennel, mounds of cardoons — which has thistles that look like artichokes but you don’t eat the thistle, you eat the stalk — and artichokes.

While Reeb is harvesting many of his plants, the big harvest comes in late July and into September. Reeb invited me to return then, when I can see the “after” of this “before” visit. Stay tuned.

50 People to Watch in 2010

Monday, May 24th, 2010

By Tom Blair, Julia Beeson Polloreno, David L. Coddon, Adam Elder and Jess Latrell
San Diego Magazine

san diego 01 10 50 People to Watch in 2010Pete Balistreri

“Details, details, details.” That’s the succinct business philosophy espoused by Pete Balistreri, executive chef at Tender Greens, a Liberty Station restaurant that specializes in “artisan, farm-to-table cooking.” Balistreri’s right at home in Point Loma, too. He was born and raised there and played sports for Point Loma High before moving on to San Diego State and, from there, to the California Culinary Academy in San Francisco. He plans to open a Tender Greens location in Hollywood in early 2010.

Ones to Watch

Monday, May 24th, 2010

By Judy Kneiszel
QSR Magazine

If you pulled three guys from the kitchen of a fine-dining restaurant and challenged them to come up with a fast-casual concept, what would they come up with? Apparently California-based Tender Greens.

“The Tender Greens concept was born of three professionals in a high-end, white-tablecloth hotel kitchen who were tired of doing what they were doing and saw a hole in the L.A. market for healthy, sustainably farmed food at a reasonable price,” says Tender Greens co-founder David Dressler.

Dressler was director of Food & Beverage at Shutters on the Beach in Santa Monica when he got to know chefs Erik Oberholtzer and Matt Lyman, now his business partners. Dressler says that over the years, while he was working “every conceivable food and beverage management position” in prominent hotels across the country, his two chef partners spent much of their careers dealing with sustainably farmed food. The three were inspired to start Tender Greens by a shared vision to create a place where “a chef would eat on his day off.”

“It’s a chef-driven, food-centric concept, but somebody like me has to keep an eye out for customer service and handle employee training,” Dressler says. “We look for a mature, experienced chef to run each restaurant, but also try to keep in mind that we need a well-rounded team.”

The concept clearly resonated with Southern California diners, who have welcomed four Tender Greens locations into the market in less than four years. The first one opened in Culver City, California, in June 2006, followed by San Diego in June 2008, West Hollywood in March 2009, and Hollywood in February.

“We have a five-year plan that takes us up and down the coast of California and into a few out-of-state markets like Washington, Nevada, Arizona, and maybe Oregon,” Dressler says. “We have growth planned for 25 to 30 restaurants. As long as we keep things spread out, there’s a whole new set of farmers we can buy from.”

He says that at this point, the company has no intention of franchising, but “might consider it if the right experienced regional partner came along.”

Tender Greens teamed up with Scarborough Farms, an independent farm that provides produce to many upscale Southern California restaurants. Leafy greens, like red and green romaine, mizuna, baby arugula, and baby spinach, are hand picked from the fields and delivered to Tender Greens daily. Dressler says Tender Greens restaurants also do some individual sourcing of produce at smaller local farms and farmer’s markets.

“As long as the quality is there and cost factors are met, it gives the chefs some latitude and helps keep us on mission,” he says.

Part of that mission is to provide a conscious connection to the origin of the food in the mind of the customer.

“We want the customer to come into a bright and happy restaurant that feels like a neighborhood bistro, not a cookie-cutter place,” Dressler says. “We want them to read off a simple, straight-forward menu and have a smiley, happy person take their order. The customer then watches people make their food to order in an open, stainless-steel kitchen.”

The menu at Tender Greens is divided into four parts: Simple Salads, Big Salads, Hot Stuff, and Comfort Soups.

“Big Salads are composed of many, many ingredients,” Dressler says.

Some of the Big Salads are the Tender Greens chefs’ interpretation of classic salads, like the Grilled Chicken Cobb, which is made with romaine, blue cheese, bacon, egg, avocado, and tomato.

There are also Big Salads original to Tender Greens, like the Chipotle Barbecue Chicken made with romaine hearts, avocado, green onions, queso fresco, crispy tortilla strips, and cilantro lime dressing.

The 10 Big Salad choices are all priced at $10.50. For $5.50, customers can order one of the five Simple Salad choices, including: romaine hearts, Caesar dressing, shaved Parmesan, and garlic croutons; red and green butter lettuce with tarragon dressing; baby spinach, goat cheese, hazelnuts, and cabernet vinaigrette; baby arugula, tomatoes, and balsamic vinaigrette; and tender greens and sherry vinaigrette. For an extra $5, Angus flank steak, free-range chicken, albacore tuna, or grilled vegetables can be added to a Simple Salad to make it a meal.

Like the vegetables, meat is thoughtfully procured. Along with the free-range chicken, the beef is hormone-free and the tuna is line-caught in the Pacific.

A third way to eat at Tender Greens is to take any of the proteins or the grilled vegetables and pair them with garlic mashed potatoes or order them as a sandwich on rustic bread. That Hot Stuff option is $10.50.

Finally, the menu includes Comfort Soup, with tomato bread soup with basil and rustic chicken every day, plus two changing flavors, for $4.

“An average ticket at Tender Greens is $14,” Dressler says. “Maybe a little higher at dinner because people will have wine or beer with dinner.”

If customers have room for dessert, Dressler says Tender Greens has what he calls an “upscale bake sale” every day, including cookies, cupcakes, and brownies all made in house. Even the choice of baked goods is affected by what produce happens to be in season.

“We’ll take whatever is best at the farmer’s markets and make jam,” Dressler says. “Then we’ll make thumbprint cookies with the jam.”

Of course, the Tender Greens management team isn’t just concerned about sustainability when it comes to food. Tender Greens makes an effort to run an environmentally sustainable operation, from the food on the plate to the paint on the wall. Eco-sensibility infuses nearly every aspect of the restaurant, including the use of green detergents and cleaners, biodegradable to-go containers, recycled napkins, organic cotton uniforms, and potted herbs for décor that are also used as cooking ingredients.

Reclaimed timber and bamboo outfit the floors, counters, and tables, and water-based, nontoxic paints and fluorescent lighting are used in the interior. Each location also collects and sorts its glass and plastic recyclables on site, and the San Diego store features solar panels and tankless water heaters to significantly reduce the amount of natural gas needed to heat water for the restaurant.

The vision behind the design was to make Tender Greens look like a vintage beachside cottage. All locations have patios with outdoor seating. The Culver City location has a retractable roof for the best of both worlds. That location, which has the smallest amount of seating among the locations, can accommodate 100 guests. The remaining restaurants each seat 120.

Dressler says Tender Greens restaurants are located in neighborhoods with strong foot-traffic business.

“Vertical tall buildings filled with hungry folks during the day and an adjacent bedroom community to replace those folks at night,” Dressler says, describing the ideal setting for a Tender Greens. “We appeal to both young and old, professional and retired. We cross all ethnicity lines, appealing to anyone who likes comfort food.”

Eat This: Tender Greens at Tender Greens

Monday, May 24th, 2010

By Alysia Gray Painte
NBC Los Angeles

Your job: Get to the restaurant. Our job: Help you order. This week, NBCLA’s Eat This journey takes us out for…

Tender Greens Vegetable Salad: Packed with grilled carrots and other vitamin-packed wonders of the garden.

Why now: Well, in a word, January. The get-back-to-it weeks following the holidays. All of those “find your healthiest self” commercials on television. Magazines telling us how to drop 10 by Valentine’s.

What else we’re looking at: The Tender Greens Salad in the Raw. A living vinaigrette — we like those words together — plus a whole mess of fancy veges topped off by raw nuts. Take that, cheesy fried dippables we lived for the last half of December.

Price: Salad in the Raw is $10.50.

Tender Greens Hollywood: It’s set to open in a few weeks at Sunset & Vine. But until then, and even after then, there is the Tender Greens in Culver City as well as the locations in West Hollywood and San Diego.

Aztec Brownie: What we’ll be tempted to eat after our Salad in the Raw.

The FastCasual.com Top 100 Movers & Shakers

Saturday, May 22nd, 2010

By Paul Barron
FastCasual.com

FC Top100 1 The FastCasual.com Top 100 Movers & ShakersTender Greens has placed an emphasis on using locally sourced products for menu items such as Chipotle Barbecue Chicken and Grilled Flatiron Steak. The company takes its commitment to environmental responsibility seriously. Its new Hollywood, Calif., location features reclaimed and recycled materials, acid-stained sealed concrete floors, skylights and original artwork. All wood surfaces are certified by the Forest Stewardship Council and/or LEED. Tender Greens also has installed an Ever Pure water-filtering system and plans to do away with all bottled water and soft drinks by the end of 2010.